By Sorrel Hoskin
Mud and misery
It was 1895 and eastern settlers were suffering from neglect and isolation - the further they were away from Stratford the more they were isolated.
For much of the year sections of the road out to the settlement of Whangamomona and beyond were impassable. The unmetalled road became a quagmire of mud in winter, and a rough, dried up track in summer.
Provisions and equipment had to be ordered months ahead and in large amounts to guarantee against shortages when traffic couldn't get through.
Bullocks were used to tow sledges, and the Tangarakau and Wanganui Rivers were used as watery highways. But floods often brought down logs that blocked the rivers and prevented boats from going through. Freight costs were atrocious and settlers struggled to make a living while attempting to break in the land.
Railway Relief
Finally hope was on the horizon as a new railway line was ordered by the Government in 1898 Taranaki needed to hook up with the main trunk line that strode down the centre of the island. The most direct route was from Stratford through Whangamomona, joining up with the Main Trunk at Okahukura near Taumaranui.
The settlers saw the railway line as the answer to their problems, but the slow progress of the line gradually killed their hopes.
Work began in 1901 from Stratford and wasn't to reach Okahukura for 32 years.
The line's progress was hampered by political indifference, World War I and the difficult terrain the construction gangs had to cope with.
Using primitive methods of pick axe and shovel and working in sometimes atrocious conditions men set out from Stratford to take as direct a line as possible to the Main Trunk.
The Camps
As the railway progressed camps were set up along the line. Initially these were temporary "tent towns" that disappeared as the railway moved forward. On arriving to work at a camp a single man was given a tent, stretcher and pick axe, with payment being taken from his wages. Married men had the luxury of a "living" tent with an open fireplace, corrugated iron chimney and stove, with bedroom tent/s off the end. The men often had no dry clothes for weeks on end, and the camps were often plagued with flies, poor sanitation and fleas. They cooked for themselves, living off canned goods as fresh fruit and vegetables were rare.

Railway construction camp at Pohokura.
Where work was delayed, or took longer, such as in the Tangarakau, more permanent cabin towns were set up, with separate areas for married and single men. Life in the camps was primitive. Some of the wives were ill prepared for the isolated camp life, conditions were basic and poor and to get anywhere took time and effort.
Labourers were paid an average of nine shillings (about 90c) a nine hour day for a five and a half day week with no holidays. Their tools were jacks, picks, crowbars, wheelbarrows and handcarts.

Construction workers on the Stratford - Okahukura line.
Image: Nigel Ogle collection.
In 1914 the line reached Whangamomona, which became the terminus. Two trains ran on Wednesdays and Saturdays and one train on the other four week days.
Camps became small towns, Tangarakau being one of the biggest, and remaining the longest.
Work slowed down during World War I as men disappeared off overseas to fight. But it soon sped up as the depression set in and more and more people went looking for work - any work - to feed their families.
But the depression was a tough time for many farmers. Prices for wool, meat and milk were down As the line crept forward, farmers along it received a little relief. But for many it was too little too late and they were forced to walk away from the land.
Snail Rail
By 1920 digging was easier, equipment included steam shovels, lorries, tractors and stone crushers. Work moved along at a faster pace.
The slowest work was on the section from Tangarakau to Heao with its 4.5 kilometres of tunnels, all dug by pickaxe and shovel, with the help of a little dynamite.
The township of Tangarakau flourished, only to disappear 20 years later without a trace.
The first train through train through the line from Stratford to Taumaranui was on 13 December 1932, but flooding prevented the "official" opening until a year later when the Auckland to New Plymouth express made its first run.

The first train from Auckland to New Plymouth is given an official welcome at Whangamomona, 1938.
Stations popped up along the line, and railway station masters became people of importance in little communities that hugged the new line.
The line enabled many farmers to stay on the land by reducing the cost of transporting supplies and fertilizer, enabling their cattle and sheep to reach markets throughout the year and bringing the port of New Plymouth closer.
Whangamomona became a refreshment stop, catering for up to 450 people at a time.
But declining passenger numbers resulted in the last local train running in 1983. The occasional freight train and "specials" are all that run on the line now.